HIV, sperm, placenta code in mrna vaccines

Gary K

New member
Banned
This gene therapy called a "vaccine" is inserting sections of HIV genetic code to have our body reproduce them. It is also inserting part of a man's sperm genetic code as well as a pregnant woman's placenta genetic code. Our immune systems are being programmed to attack these codes. No problems there. Our immune system attacking a man's sperm and a pregnant woman's placenta. What could go wrong there? Nah. Nothing could possibly go wrong there. :rolleyes:

 

Gary K

New member
Banned
An important part of the above interview is Dr. Madej said that if we have genes that have been modified in us that the SC has ruled that whoever has them is now owned by whoever produced the technology. This is nothing more than serfdom and a complete legal refutation of personal liberty. Such a person no longer has any rights nor privacy. They are a totally owned slave.
 

expos4ever

Well-known member
Carrie Madej? This is like shooting fish in a barrel:

Madej describes herself as an osteopathic doctor and a “child of God and a believer in Jesus Christ.” She’s also a QAnon believer who questions why COVID-19 has been a bigger story than what she describes as a “global elite pedophile ring” and reposts byzantine diagrams supposedly revealing Bill Gates as the mastermind behind the global pandemic.

This past summer, she was convinced that a long-debunked website advertising the “Cannibal Club” restaurant in Los Angeles was in fact a real eatery serving human flesh. “We ‘taste like pork,’” she tweeted. “Dear God—help us change this world for the better!”


Pardon me if I do not take medical from the likes of this nutjob.
 
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chair

Well-known member
This gene therapy called a "vaccine" is inserting sections of HIV genetic code to have our body reproduce them. It is also inserting part of a man's sperm genetic code as well as a pregnant woman's placenta genetic code. Our immune systems are being programmed to attack these codes. No problems there. Our immune system attacking a man's sperm and a pregnant woman's placenta. What could go wrong there? Nah. Nothing could possibly go wrong there. :rolleyes:

Sigh...
 

Clete

Truth Smacker
Silver Subscriber
This gene therapy called a "vaccine" is inserting sections of HIV genetic code to have our body reproduce them. It is also inserting part of a man's sperm genetic code as well as a pregnant woman's placenta genetic code. Our immune systems are being programmed to attack these codes. No problems there. Our immune system attacking a man's sperm and a pregnant woman's placenta. What could go wrong there? Nah. Nothing could possibly go wrong there. :rolleyes:

You haven't the faintest idea what in the world you're talking about. This was an incredibly irresponsible post. You ought to delete it.

What these vaccines do is introduce just the proteins that are the spikes all around the outside of COVID-19 virus into the body. They're the proteins that give the virus access to the cells it's trying to deposit its DNA into and to take over. Your body then builds antibodies against those proteins which effectively gives you antibodies against the virus. A very effective vaccine.

IT IS NOT GENE THERAPY!!!! The technology related to MRNA has to do with how they build those proteins. It has nothing to do with how the vaccine works inside your body and it most certainly is not any sort of gene therapy that has anything to do with training your body to attack DNA sequences. In fact, our bodies CANNOT be programmed to attack DNA sequences. That's not how our immune system works. Your body does know nor care what the genetic code of this protein is. It is altogether irrelevant that the scientists who developed the technique borrowed some code from other proteins in order to create the one they needed because your body does not read the DNA sequence, it responds to the protein itself. The only thing your body is going to attack after getting this vaccine is a very specific protein and it will only do that for as long as it detects those proteins in your system. Once you've gone several months without the body needing to deploy those antibodies then your immune system will stop making them.

The side effects people experience have to do a complex set of issues having to do with things like allergic reactions to some ingredient in the vaccine and how sensitive a person's immune system is to certain types of attack. Some people's immune system will sort of freak out and go into over drive thinking these proteins represent a much stronger attack than they actually do. Some people's systems will pull resources from other areas in order to produce as many antibodies as possible and so one person might get a fever while someone else discovers that they sunburn more easily and yet someone else can't tell that they got the shot at all. It just depends on the person. What it has nothing whatsoever to do with is anyone's system being taught to attack sperm cells (which it would do anyway if not for seminal fluid), or placentas or any other such thing.

Clete
 

expos4ever

Well-known member
Character assassination. One of the favorite tools of the deep state and the far left.
Since when do legitimate questions about the qualifications of this "doctor" constitute character assassination?

And you want to talk about "the far left"? Is it the far left who are wearing the tinfoil hats in current American political discourse? That is, who has concocted visions of a secretive deep state, a pedophile ring, tracking devices in vaccines, and on and on?
 

Hilltrot

Well-known member
Since when do legitimate questions about the qualifications of this "doctor" constitute character assassination?

And you want to talk about "the far left"? Is it the far left who are wearing the tinfoil hats in current American political discourse? That is, who has concocted visions of a secretive deep state, a pedophile ring, tracking devices in vaccines, and on and on?
Trump worked with Russia to overturn the 2016 election.

Trump got elected due to Russian interference.

Trump bullied Ukraine.

Trump tried to overturn election in Georgia.

Wikileaks is controlled by Putin.

Hunter Biden's e-mails were all faked.

Don't trust the vaccine if there is a second Trump administration.

You can 't possibly develop a vaccine in less than a year.

The riots over the summer were mostly peaceful.

The gun-show loophole.

There is no crisis on the border.

Trump is setting up concentration camps.

And 9/11 started as leftist propaganda as well.

Do I need to continue?
 

expos4ever

Well-known member
Trump tried to overturn election in Georgia.
So I suppose the recorded phone calls are fake?

To suggest that fantasies about pedophile rings and the rest of the tinfoil-hattery can be compared to hard evidence of Trump malfeasance is laughable. But, of course, par for the course.
 

Hilltrot

Well-known member
@expose4ever didn't have a problem much of my list.

That must mean he is a 9/11 truther, a Russia conspiracy nut, Trump was going to poison the vaccine, etc.
 

Hilltrot

Well-known member
So I suppose the recorded phone calls are fake?

To suggest that fantasies about pedophile rings and the rest of the tinfoil-hattery can be compared to hard evidence of Trump malfeasance is laughable. But, of course, par for the course.

Yep, you're a conspiracy nut just like ffreeloader.

Do you want your own alpaca?
 

expos4ever

Well-known member

Yep, you're a conspiracy nut just like ffreeloader.

Do you want your own alpaca?
All righty-then, let's see what your "source" - thepostmillenial.com - is all about. To whet the appetite:

Cosmin Dzsurdzsa is an editor at what has quickly become one of the most widely shared right-wing news websites in Canada.
According to the About Us page on The Post Millennial’s website, the University of Waterloo graduate used to be a “researcher on The Oxford English Dictionary.” The dictionary’s publisher, Oxford University Press, said in an email that it has “no record” of Dzsurdzsa working for the company, but that he appears to have worked on an unaffiliated research project examining the text.

But that short biography leaves out a few steps. Before Dzsurdzsa was hired at the Post Millennial, he also worked for websites that promoted racism and peddled pro-Kremlin content.


Stand by for more tidbits......
 

expos4ever

Well-known member

Yep, you're a conspiracy nut just like ffreeloader.

Do you want your own alpaca?
Your dubious source aside, your post is deceptive - what a surprise. Even if it is true that the Post distorted the content of one particular conversation, we still have this smoking gun, a direct quote from those bloated orange lips:

So what are we going to do here, folks? I only need 11,000 votes. Fellas, I need 11,000 votes. Give me a break.

Game, set, and match.
 

Hilltrot

Well-known member
All righty-then, let's see what your "source" - thepostmillenial.com - is all about. To whet the appetite:

Cosmin Dzsurdzsa is an editor at what has quickly become one of the most widely shared right-wing news websites in Canada.
According to the About Us page on The Post Millennial’s website, the University of Waterloo graduate used to be a “researcher on The Oxford English Dictionary.” The dictionary’s publisher, Oxford University Press, said in an email that it has “no record” of Dzsurdzsa working for the company, but that he appears to have worked on an unaffiliated research project examining the text.

But that short biography leaves out a few steps. Before Dzsurdzsa was hired at the Post Millennial, he also worked for websites that promoted racism and peddled pro-Kremlin content.


Stand by for more tidbits......
You're not only a conspiracy nut, you are a moron. You can always just look up the retraction from WaPo, you conspiracy nut.

 
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